Wedding Extras & Special Touches Australia
Trusted wedding extras across Australia — photo booths, audio guestbooks, sparkler send-offs, fireworks, live artists, and confetti petals. Save favourites and shortlist by region or service.
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Wedding extras & special touches in Australia
Wedding photo booths
Traditional & photographer-style
Wedding audio guestbooks
Vintage phone-style voice keepsakes
Wedding cold sparks
Indoor-safe sparkler effects
Wedding fireworks
Outdoor pyrotechnic finales
Wedding confetti & petals
Aisle and send-off send-offs
Wedding live artists
Live painters & illustrators
Plan with confidence
How to choose wedding extras in Australia
Photo booths now reach half of Australian weddings
Around 1 in 2 Australian couples now include a photo booth at the reception. The format mix has shifted — the photographer-style booth (a roaming or stationed photographer with a backdrop, capturing posed moments with high-quality prints) leads at half of bookings, with traditional enclosed booths at just over a quarter, and unique formats (mirror booths, 360-spin platforms, vintage caravan booths) at just over 1 in 5. Pick the format that matches your reception aesthetic, not the most-Instagrammed one.
Audio guestbooks are quietly becoming the new sign-in book
Vintage telephone-handset audio guestbooks let guests leave a voicemail-style message for the couple — toasts, jokes, well-wishes. The recordings are delivered as a digital archive a few weeks after the wedding. Australian couples are increasingly choosing them over (or alongside) the traditional written guestbook because the messages capture personality the way text never does. Set up near the bar or the photo booth where guests are already paused.
Match send-off effects to the venue
Cold sparks (indoor-safe sparklers that look pyrotechnic without the heat or smoke) work in any venue with normal-height ceilings. Outdoor sparklers and fireworks work outdoors but need a clear cool-down zone, fire-warden coverage, and venue approval. Confetti petals work most outdoor and many indoor venues; biodegradable rice and dried-flower confetti read better in photographs than paper. Confirm the send-off effect with the venue before booking the supplier.
Live painters and illustrators capture more than photos can
Live wedding painters work through the ceremony and reception, finishing a canvas of the day's key moments by the end of the night. Live illustrators work faster, sketching guest portraits or wedding-day caricatures in real time. Both create a guest-engagement moment and a keepsake that photographs can't replicate. Brief the artist on the moment you most want captured (vows, first dance, family group portrait) so the final canvas anchors on the right memory.
Plan late-night food as part of the experience
Late-night taco trucks, doughnut walls, and roving canapé carts are increasingly common in Australian wedding receptions — they reset guest energy at the dance-floor lull and give non-dancers somewhere to hover. Brief the timing carefully: too early and guests are still full from dinner; too late and people have already started leaving. The sweet spot is usually 60–90 minutes into reception, right when the dance floor is starting to thin.
Bomboniere — pick personal over decorative
Around 2 in 3 Australian couples include bomboniere. Personalised keepsakes (custom magnets, engraved coasters, small printed prints) and edible treats (mini bottles, jam jars, biscuits) lead the format mix at similar share. Per-guest spend mostly sits between $5–$15. Couples who get the highest guest engagement now lean toward bomboniere that feels personal rather than purely decorative — something guests will actually keep, eat, or use.
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